Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 18
PETITIONER:
GHANSHYAM DAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
REGIONAL ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF SALESTAX NAGPUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/08/1963
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
DAS, S.K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 766 1964 SCR (4) 436
CITATOR INFO :
R 1967 SC1408 (10,11,12)
R 1968 SC 565 (5,9,31,32,33)
E 1968 SC 894 (6)
R 1970 SC 311 (3)
R 1970 SC2057 (9)
R 1977 SC 540 (9,10)
R 1979 SC1098 (12)
ACT:
Sales Tax-Assessment of turn-over escaping assessment
"Escaped Assessment --Meaning of-Assessment proceedings in
respect of a registered dealer-Commencement of-Central
Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (XXI of 1947), ss.
10(1), 11-A.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a registered dealer carrying on business
in bidis. For the year 1949-50, i.e., for the period from
October 22, 1949 to November 9, 1950 he submitted only one
return on October 5, 1950 for one quarter and defaulted in
respect of the other quarters. He was served a notice on
August 13, 1954 under s. 11(1) and (2) of the C.P. and Berar
Sales Tax Act, 1947, in respect of the turnover for the said
period. There after, he filed the returns, but in the
assessment proceedings he contended inter alia, that the
proceedings before the sales tax commissioner were barred by
time. This contention was rejected and his tax liability
was determined. Then the appellant moved the High Court in
writ petition. In the other appeal No. 102/1961, the
appellant had not filed any return for the year 1950-51 i.e.
for the period from November 10, 1950 to October 31, 1951.
He was served a notice on October 15, 1954, under s. 11(4)
of the Act. The said notice was within 3 years from October
16, 1951 which fell within the 4th quarter of the concerned
year. The appellant then, filed his returns under protest
and contended that the assessment proceedings Were barred by
limitation under s. 11(A) of the Act. This plea was re-
jected and his tax liability was determined. The appellant
then, filed another writ petition for a similar relief.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 18
Both the writ petitions were heard together and the learned
single Judge relying on a decision in Firm Sheonarayan
Matadin v. Sales Tax Officer, Raipur, quashed the said
assessments. The respondent then, filed Letters Patent
Appeals before the Division Bench and by a common judgment
the orders of the learned single Judge were set aside. In
this Court, the appellant contended : (1) the expression
"escaped assessment" in s. 11-A of the Act would apply also
to a case where there was no assessment at all ; (2) even if
the first assessment proceedings were pending before the
appropriate authority, it could only make the assessment
within three years from the date of the commencement of the
said proceedings, which would start only after the
appropriate authority issued a notice under s. 10(1) or s.
11(2) or s. 11(5) of the Act; (3) in the present case no
proceedings in respect -of the said assessment were pending
and (4) as only a part of the fourth quarter in the second
appeal falls within three years,
437
the proceedings in respect of the said entire quarter would
be barred under s. 11-A of the Act and, in any view only the
turnover escaped in respect of the period between November
10, 1950 to October 31, 1951 could be assessed. The
respondent mainly contended that whatever may be said in the
case of an unregistered dealer, in the case of a registered
dealer the proceedings commence from the date fixed in the
registration certificate within which the said dealer has a
statutory obligation to furnish his return.
Held : (Raghubar Dayal, J. dissenting) : The expression
"escaped assessment" in s. 11-A of the Act includes that of
a turnover which has not been assessed at all, because for
one reason or other no assessment proceedings were initiated
and therefore, no assessment was made in respect thereof.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Pirojbai’ N. Contrac-
tor, (1937) 5 I.T.R. 338, Maharaj’ Kumar Kamal Singh v. Com-
missioner of Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa, [1959] Supp. -
S.C.R. 10 Maharajadhiraj Sir Kameshwar Singh v. State of
Bihar, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 332, Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay v. Narsee Nagsee & Co. [1960] 3 S.C.R. 988 and State
of Madras v. Balu Chettiar, (1956) 7 S.T.C. 519,relied on.
The assessment proceedings under the sales tax must be held
to be pending from the time the said proceedings were
initiated until they were terminated by a final order of
assessment. Before the final order of assessment, it could
not be said that the entire turnover or a part thereof of a
dealer had escaped assessment, for, the assessment was not
completed and, if completed, it might be that the entire
turnover would be caught in the net.
In re Lachhiram Basantlal, (1930) I.L.R. 58 Cal. 909 and
Rajendra Nath Mukherjee v. Income-tax Commissioner, (1938)
L.R. 61 I.A. 10, referred to.
Under sub-section (1) of s. 10, the Commissioner need not
issue a notice to a registered dealer for furnishing the
relevant returns, but a statutory obligation is imposed on
the said dealer to do so by such dates and to such authority
as may be prescribed.
In the case of a registered dealer there are four variations
in the matter of assessment of his ’turnover : (1) He
submits a return by the date prescribed and pays the tax due
in terms of the said return; the commissioner accepts the
correctness of the return and appropriates the amount paid
towards the tax due for the period covered by the return.
(2) The Commissioner is not satisfied with the correctness
of the return ; he issues a notice to him under s. 11(2),
and makes an enquiry as provided under the Act, but does not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 18
finalize the assessment. (3) The registered dealer does not
submit a return; the Commissioner issues a notice under s.
10(3) and s. 11(4) of the Act. (4) The registered dealer
does not submit any return for any period and the
Commissioner issues notice to him beyond three years.
438
In the case of a registered dealer the proceedings before
the Commissioner starts factually when a return is made or
when a notice is issued to him either under s. 10(3) or
under s. 11(2) of the Act. The acceptance of the contention
that the statutory obligation to file a return initiates the
proceedings is to invoke a fiction not sanctioned by the
Act.
Bisesar House v. State of Bombay (1958) 9 S.T.C. 654 and
Ramakrishna Ramnath v. Sales Tax Officer, Nagpur, (1960) 11
S.T.C. 811, distinguished.
A statutory obligation to make a return within a prescribed
time does not proprio vigore initiate the assessment
proceedings before the Commissioner; but the proceedings
would commence after the return was submitted and would
continue till a final order of assessment was made in regard
to the said return.
In the first case, therefore, the tribunal had no
jurisdiction to issue a notice under s. 11-A with respect to
the quarters other than that covered by return made by the
appellant. In the second case, the Commissioner had
jurisdiction to assess the turnover in respect of the entire
fourth quarter, but as it was done without showing
separately the assessment of tax payable in respect of each
quarter, this Court cannot confine the relief to be given to
the appellant in these appeals to the period barred under s.
1 1-A of the Act. The appeals, therefore must be allowed.
Per Raghubar Dayal, J.--The turnover for the years 1949-50
and 1950-51 could not be said to be turnover which escaped
assessment, within the meaning of that expression in s. 11-A
of the Act and therefore, the notices issued by the
Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax in 1954 under s. 11(2)
cannot be said to be notices issued under s. 11-A beyond the
period within which they could have been issued.
The proceedings for the assessment commence against the
registered dealer from the prescribed date for his
submitting the return which he is required to submit by sub-
section (1) of S. 10. No notice is necessary to be issued
to him for the submitting of the return for the purpose of
assessment. The statute, by the provisions of sub-section,
(1) of s. 10, gives him the required notice to the effect
that he is to submit the necessary returns by the dates
prescribed by the rules. The registration certificate
issued to him mentions the period of the dealer’s year, the
prescribed return period and the dates by which the dealer
had to furnish the returns. The registered dealer is, in
this way, in no worse position than an ordinary dealer who
receives a notice for -submitting the returns by a certain
date. In the case of the unregistered dealer, the
proceedings commence by the issue of a notice under
subsection (1) of s. 10.
There is no time limit fixed for the sales tax officer to
take action against the registered dealer under sub-sections
(2) and (4) of s. 11. He does not contravene Art. 14, if he
takes action
439
against a registered dealer under sub-section (2) or sub-
section 4 of s. 11 even after the expiry of three years from
the period whose turnover is to be assessed.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 18
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 101 and
102 of 1961.
Appeals from the order dated December 13, 1957, of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in Letters Patent Appeals Nos. 208
and 207 of 1956 respectively.
J.M. Thakar, H. M. Thakar, O. C. Mathur, J. B. Dadachanji
and Ravinder Narain, for the appellants.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the respondents.
August 16, 1963. The judgment of S. K. Das, Acting C.J., K.
Subba Rao, N. Rajagopala Ayyangar and J. R. Mudholkar, JJ.
was delivered by Subba Rao, J. Raghubar Dayal, J. delivered
a dissenting Opinion.
SUBBA RAO J.-These two appeals by certificate raise the
question of the true interpretation of the meaning of the
expression "escaped assessment" in S. 11-A of the Central
Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (XXI of 1947),
hereinafter called the Act.
The facts in Civil Appeal No. 101 of 1961 are as follows:
the appellant is the manager of a joint hindu family firm
carrying on business in bidis. He is registered as a dealer
under S. 8 of the Act. Every registered dealer under the
Act is required to furnish quarterly returns of his turnover
within one month from the end of the quarter. For the year
1949-50, i.e., for the period from October 22, 1949 to
November 9, 1950, he submitted a return of his turnover on
October 5, 1950 for one quarter only and made a default in
respect of the other quarters. The Assistant Commissioner
of Sales-Tax, Nagpur, issued a notice to the appellant on
August 13, 1954 in Form No. 11 under S. 11(1) and (2) of the
Act in respect of the turnover of the firm for the said
period. The appellant thereafter filed the returns for the
three quarters in respect of which he had made default, but
in the assessment proceedings he contended, inter alia, that
the Assistant Commissioner could not assess his escaped
turnover as he could only do so within three years from the
expiry of the period in respect whereof his turnover had
escaped assessment. The Sales-tax Commissioner re-
440
jected the said contention, proceeded with the assessment
and determined the tax liability at Rs. 15,846.00. Aggrieved
by the said order, the appellant filed a petition under Art.
226 of the Constitution in the High Court of judicature at
Nagpur mainly on the ground that the proceedings before the
Sales-tax Commissioner were barred by time under s. 11-A of
the Act.
Civil Appeal No. 102 of 1961 is in respect of assessment of
sales-tax on the turnover of the appellant for the year
1950-51. The appellant had not filed any return for the
whole year. The Assistant Commissioner of Sales-tax,
Nagpur, served a notice on the appellant on October 15, 1954
under s. 11(4) of the Act. The appellant filed his returns
and produced the account-books under protest and also raised
objections that the assessment proceedings were barred by
limitation under s. 11-A of the Act. The Assistant
Commissioner rejected his plea of limitation and determined
his tax liability at Rs. 16,537-5-0. The appellant filed
another petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the
said High Court for a similar relief.
Both the petitions were heard together by Kotwal J. The
learned judge, following the decision of a division Bench of
that Court in Firm Sheonarayan Matadin v. Sales-tax Officer,
Raipur(1), held that, as the notices were issued beyond
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 18
three years from the expiry of the relevant periods, the
Sales-tax Commissioner had no jurisdiction to make the
assessments. On that ground he quashed the said
assessments.
The respondent filed Letters Patent Appeals to a division
Bench of the said High Court. On the formation of the State
of Madhya Pradesh, the above appeals were transferred to the
Madhya Pradesh High Court and were heard by a division Bench
consisting of Hidayatullah C.J. and Choudhuri J. The
Division Bench held that s. 11-A of the Act could apply only
to a case where there was a final assessment and that in the
instant cases the first assessment proceedings were pending
and therefore, the said section had no application thereto.
In the result, by a common judgment, they set aside the
orders of Kotwal J. Hence the resent appeals.
(1) 1956 S.T.C. 623.
441
Mr. J. M. Thakar, learned counsel for the appellant raised
before us the following four points : (1) The expression
"escaped assessment" in s. 11-A of the Act would apply also
to a case where there was no assessment at all. (2) Even if
the first assessment proceedings were pending before the
appropriate authority, the said authority could only make
the assessment within three years from the date of the
commencement of the said proceedings, which, according to
him, would start from the date of issue of notice by the
said authority in the manner prescribed by the Central
Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Rules, 1947, hereinafter called
the Rules. (3) In the present case no proceedings in respect
of the said assessments were pending before the said
authority. And (4) as only a part of the fourth quarter in
Civil Appeal No. 102 of 1961 falls within three years, the
proceedings in respect of the said entire quarter would be
barred under s. 11-A of the Act and, in any view, only the
turnover escaped in respect of the period between October
16, 1951 and October 31, 1951 could be assessed.
Mr. B. Sen learned counsel for the respondent, controverted
the said argument ’and contended that in the case of
registered dealers there was a statutory obligation to make
a return and, therefore, the proceedings must be deemed to
be pending from the date an assessee was bound to make his
return and that as the proceedings in the present case were
pending by statutory force, there was no scope for invoking
the provisions of s. 11-A of the Act. In Civil Appeal No.
102 of 1961 he raised the point that a calendar year in s.
11-A must be calculated from January to December and if so
calculated no part of the fourth quarter would be beyond
three years, but he did not pursue the line of argument.
The main question in the appeals is the true construction of
the provisions of s. 11-A of the Act. The material
provisions thereof may be set out. They read:
Section 11-A (1) : If in consequence of any
information which has come into his
possession, the Commissioner is satisfied that
any turnover of a dealer during any period has
escaped assessment the Commissioner may, at
any time within three calendar years from the
expiry of such period
29-2 S. C. India/64
442
.........proceed in such manner as may be
prescribed to...assess....the tax payable on
any such turnover......."
Under this section if the turnover of a dealer during any
period has escaped assessment, the Commissioner may at any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 18
time within three calendar years from the expiry of such
period proceed in the manner prescribed to assess the tax
payable on the said turnover. The crucial expression for
the present purpose is "escaped assessment". What does it
mean? Does it include, as learned counsel for the appellant
contends, a case where no assessment has been made at all
or, as learned counsel for the respondent contends, take in
only the post-assessment detection of evasion of tax? This
problem has received the attention of Courts in different
contexts.
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Pirojbai N.
Contractor(1) the words "escaped assessment" in the Indian
Income-tax Act were defined. It was held therein that the
said words were wide enough to include cases where no notice
under s. 22(2) of the Income-tax Act had been issued to the
assessee and therefore his income had not been assessed at
all under s. 23 thereof. The said view, has been assumed to
be correct by this Court in Maharaj Kumar Kamal Singh V.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar & Orissa(2) and
Maharajadhiraj Sir Kameshwar Singh v. State of Bihar(3) and
extended to cover a case where the first assessment was made
in due course but a part of the income escaped therefore.
This Court, in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Narsee
Nagsee & Co.(4), construing the provisions of s. 14 of the
Business Profits Tax Act, 1947, reviewed the law on the
subject and came to the following conclusion :
"All these cases show that the words "escaping
assessment" apply equally to cases where a
notice was received by the assessee but
resulted in no assessment at all and to cases
where due to. any reason no notice was issued
to the assessee, and, therefore, there was
(1) (1937) 5 I.T.R. 338.
(2) [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 10.
(3) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 332.
(4) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 988.
443
no assessment of his income."
It is true that the said decisions were given with reference
to either s. 34(1) of the Income-tax Act or s. 14 of the
Business Profits Tax Act, but so far as the present enquiry
is concerned the said sections are pari’ materia with s. 11-
A of the Act. In construing the meaning of the expression
"escaped assessment" in s. 11-A of the Act there is no
reason why the said expression should bear a more limited
meaning than what it bears under the said two Acts. All the
three Acts are taxing statutes and the three relevant
sections therein are intended to gather the revenue which
has improperly escaped. A division Bench of the Madras High
Court in The State of Madras v. Balu Chettiar(1) following
the decision of a Full Bench of that Court, held that where
an assessee did not file at any time a return of his turn-
over for a year and, therefore, there was no assessment
made, the turnover escaped assessment. It was observed
therein:
"Whether it was a case of omission or of
deliberate concealment on the part of the
assessee, he did not submit any return. It
was his default that led to the escape of the
turnover for 1951-52 from assessment to the
tax lawfully due. It was the whole of the
turnover for that year that escaped
assessment."
It is not necessary to multiply citations. We, there-
fore, hold that the expression "escaped assessment" in s.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 18
11-A of the Act includes that of a turnover which has not
been assessed at all, because for one reason or other no
assessment proceedings were initiated and therefore, no
assessment was made in respect thereof.
The next question is whether a turnover could be said to
escape assessment if proceedings in respect of the first
assessment were pending and no final order of assessment was
made therein.
In In re Lachhiram Basantlal(2) Rankin C.J. tersely observed
:
"Income has not escaped assessment if there
are pending at the time proceedings for the
assessment of the assessee’s income which have
not yet terminated
(1) (1956) 7 S.T.C. 519, 522.
(2) (1930) I.L.R. 58 Cal. 909.
444
in a final assessment thereof".
This dictum laid down a clearly understandable principle.
How can an escape of a turnover from assessment be
predicated before the assessment is completed? The Judicial
Committee in Rajendra Nath Mukherjee v. Income-tax
Commissioner(1) relied upon this dictum in rejecting the
contention to the contrary raised by the assessee before
them, and endorsed the said view. That decision turned upon
the interpretation of s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act.
There, Burn & Co., an unregistered firm, made a return of
their total, income on January 13, 1928. On February 25,
1928, the Income-tax Officer made an assessment on Martin &
Co., the partners whereof purchased the business of Burn &
Co., in respect of the combined incomes returned by Martin &
Co. and Burn & Co. The High Court held that under the
income-tax Act the income of the said firms could not be
aggregated and that the income of each must be separately
assessed. Thereafter, on November 8, 1930, an assessment
was made on Burn & Co. on their income as returned by them
on January 13, 1928. It was contended that under the
Income-tax Act it was not competent to make any assessment
to tax after the expiry of the year for which the tax was
charged except in the cases provided for under s. 34 of the
Income-Tax Act. It was held by the judicial Committee that
the income of Burn & Co. had not escaped assessment within
the meaning of s. 34 of the Income-tax Act. It was observed
therein :
"If an assessment is not made on income within
the tax year then that income, they submit,
has escaped assessment within that year, and
can be subsequently assessed only under s. 34
with its time limitation. This involves
reading the expression "has escaped
assessment’ as equivalent to "has not been
assessed". Their Lordships cannot assent to
this reading. It gives too narrow a meaning
to the word "assessment" and too wide a
meaning to the word "escaped". That the word
"assessment" is not confined in the statute to
the definite act of making an order of
assessment appears from s. 66, which refers to
(1933) 61 IA. 10, 15-16.
445
"the course of any assessment" To say that the
income of Bum & Co., which in January, 1928,
was returned for assessment and which was
accepted as correctly returned, though it was
erroneously included in the assessment of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 18
Martin & Co., has escaped assessment in 1927-
28 seems to their Lordships an inadmissible
reading. The fact that s. 34 requires a
notice to be served calling for a return of
income which has escaped assessment strongly
suggests that income which has already been
duly returned for assessment cannot be said to
have "escaped" assessment Within the statutory
meaning."
As s. 34 of the Income-tax Act had no application and as
there was no other time limit prescribed or necessarily
implied under that Act, it held that the assessment was not
out of time. This decision is a clear authority for the
position that if a return was duly made, the assessment
could be made at any time unless the statute prescribed a
time limit. This can only be for the reason that the
proceedings duly initiated in time will be pending and can,
therefore, be completed without time limit. A proceeding is
said to be pending as soon as it is commenced and until it
is concluded. On the said analogy, the assessment
proceedings under the Sales-tax Act must be held to be
pending from the time the said proceedings were initiated
until they were terminated by a final order of assessment.
Before the final order of assessment, it could not be said
that the entire turnover or a part thereof of a dealer had
escaped assessment, for the assessment was not completed and
if, completed, it might be that the entire turnover would be
caught in the net.
But the more difficult question is, when do the assessment
proceedings under the Act in respect of registered dealer
commence and when do they terminate? -While learned counsel
for the appellant contends that the said proceedings under
the Act start only after the appropriate authority issued a
notice under s. 10(1) or s. 11(2) or s. 11(5) of the Act,
learned counsel for the respondent contends that whatever
may be said in the case of an unregistered dealer, in the
case of a registered dealer the proceedings commence from
the date fix-
446
ed in the registration certificate within which the said
dealer has a statutory obligation to furnish his return.
To appreciate the rival contentions it is necessary to
notice the relevant provisions of the Act and the Rules.
Under s. 4 of the Act, every dealer whose turnover exceeds
the specified limits prescribed under sub-section (5)
thereof shall be liable to pay tax in accordance with the
provisions of the Act on all sales effected by him. Under
s. 8 no dealer shall, while being liable to pay tax under
the Act, carry on business as a dealer unless he had been
registered as such and possesses a registration certificate.
Part IV of the Rules prescribes the manner in which a dealer
shall get himself registered under the Act. Under s. 8, if
the dealer satisfies the requirements prescribed in that
regard, the Sales-tax Officer grants him a registration
certificate in Form II, which specifies the particulars,
such as, the location of the business, the nature of the
business etc. The said Officer enters the name of every
dealer registered in a ledger maintained under s. 9 and
issues copies of registration certificates for exhibition in
the places of their business. Under one of the columns in
that Form the period for which and the date on which the
return has to be furnished has to be mentioned. A list of
such registered dealer is also published under r. 17. Under
the Act, no dealer, who is liable to pay tax thereunder,
shall carry on business unless he has been registered as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 18
such and possesses a registration certificate. It is,
therefore, clear that registration is mainly conceived in
the interest of revenue, to facilitate collection of taxes
and to prevent the evasion thereof.
Next we come to the provisions dealing with the manner in
which a registered dealer will be assessed to tax. Under s.
10 every registered dealer shall furnish such returns by
such dates to such authority as may be prescribed. Rule 19
prescribes the manner in which such a return has to be
furnished. Thereunder every registered dealer shall furnish
to the appropriate Sales-tax Officer quarterly returns
within one calendar month from the expiry of the quarter to
which the return relates and in case he has more than one
place of business in the Province, he, shall submit a
consolidated return for all the
447
places of business and also a return separately for each of
the places of business within two calendar months from the
said date. It also says that each of such returns submitted
shall be accompined by a treasury receipted chalan in Form V
in respect of the tax due according to the return. In short
he has to file a return or returns in the prescribed form
within the prescribed time and also pay the tax payable by
him along with the returns. Under s. 11(1) if the
Commissioner is satisfied that the return furnished by the
dealer in respect of a period is correct and complete, he
assesses the dealer on it. If he does not accept it, under
cl. (2) thereof he shall serve the dealer with a notice
appointing the place and date for, enquiry ; and after
enquiry he shall assess him to tax under r. 3. Rule 31
prescribes that the notice under s. 11(2) shall be served on
the dealer in Form II. It may be stated that the mention of
sub-section (1) in that rule appears to be a mistake for no
notice is contemplated under that sub-section. If the
registered dealer fails to furnish his return under s. 10(1)
of the Act in the manner prescribed within the time
prescribed under sub-section (3) thereof, the Commissioner,
after giving a reasonable opportunity of being heard, may
impose on him by way of penalty a sum not exceeding one-
fourth of the amount of the tax which may be assessed on him
under s. 11. Rule 32, which is an omnibus provision, says
that in such an event, a notice in Form XII has to be issued
on him. Under sub-section (4) of s. 11, if a registered
dealer makes the defaults mentioned therein the Commissioner
shall, in the prescribed manner, -assess him to the best of
his judgment. Rule 32 also governs the procedure for making
the said assessment. Rule 33 prescribes the maintenance of
a register of cases instituted under s. 11. Rule 34 gives
the form of the order to be made and r. 39 provides for the
preparation of assessment record.
At this stage an argument advanced by learned counsel for
the appellant, namely, that under s. 10(1) of the Act the
Commissioner has to give notice in the prescribed manner to
a registered dealer, may be considered. Section 10(1) 1eads
:
"Every such dealer as may be required so to do
by
448
the Commissioner by notice served in the
prescribed manner and every registered dealer
shall furnish such returns by such dates and
to such authority as may be prescribed."
The word "dealer", unless there is anything repugnant in the
subject or context, means any person who carries on the
business of selling or supplying goods and in its wide
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 18
meaning it certainly, takes in both a registered dealer and
a dealer who has not registered himself under the Act. The
question, therefore, is whether there is anything repugnant
in the subject or context of s. 10 to limit the word
"dealer" in the first part of sub-section (1) to a dealer
other than a registered dealer. Sub-section (1) is in two
parts : the first part speaks of a dealer and the second
part of a registered dealer and the sub-section says that
both of them shall furnish the returns. If the dealer in
the first part includes a registered dealer, the mention of
"every registered dealer" in the second part will become
redundant, for a registered dealer is included in the
expression "dealer". A construction which would attribute
redundancy to a Legislature shall not be accepted except for
compelling reasons. This redundancy disappears if the
expression "dealer" in the first part excludes a registered
dealer mentioned in the second part. This legislative
intention is further made clear by the provisions of ss. 14
and 17 of the Act. Section 14 imposes a duty on every
registered dealer or every dealer on whom notice has been
served to furnish returns under sub-section (1) of s. 10 to
keep a true account of the value of goods bought and sold by
him ; and s. 17 imposes a duty on the said two categories of
dealers to inform the prescribed authority regarding changes
of business. The distinction between the two categories of
dealers is maintained not only in s. 10 but also in ss. 14
and 17. It is, therefore, clear that under sub-section (1)
of s. 10, the Commissioner need not issue a notice to a
registered dealer for furnishing the relevant returns, but a
statutory obligation is imposed on the said dealer to do so
by such dates and to such authority as may be prescribed.
Now coming to the case of a dealer who did not register
himself under the Act, the position is different.
449
There is no statutory obligation cast on him by any section
to submit a return. His is really a case of evasion from
his obligation to get himself registered under the Act.
Section 10(1) enables the Commissioner to issue a notice to
him requiring him to furnish a return in the prescribed
manner. In his case also the same procedure as prescribed
in ss. 10(3), 11(1) and 11.(2) has to be followed in the
matter of assessment. But sub-section (5) of s. 11
introduces a stringent provision to prevent evasion of tax.
Under that sub-section if upon information the Commissioner
is satisfied that any such dealer, who is liable to pay tax
under the Act in respect of any period, has willfully failed
to apply for registration, he shall at any time within three
calender years from the expiry of such period, after giving
the dealer a reasonable opportunity of being heard, proceed
in the manner as may be prescribed to assess to the best of
his judgment the amount of tax due from the dealer in res-
pect of such period and of subsequent periods. He may also
direct the dealer to pay, by way of penalty, in addition to
the amount of tax so assessed a sum not exceeding 11 times
that amount. So in the case of a dealer liable to pay tax,
but who has failed to register himself under the Act, the
Commissioner may issue a notice to him under r. 22 and
assess him under s. 11 ; and in the case of evasion, on
subsequent information, the Commissioner can assess him
within three calendar years from the expiry of the period in
respect of which he was liable to pay tax and for subsequent
years and also impose a penalty on him. It is clear from
this provision that in the case of such a dealer the
assessment can be made only within three calendar years from
the expiry of the period in respect whereof he has been
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
liable to pay tax under the Act. If the contention of
learned counsel for the respondent should prevail, in the
case of a registered dealer there would be no limitation in
the matter of assessment, whereas in the case of a dealer
who evaded law, be would have the benefit of three years’
limitation.
From the foregoing discussion it is seen that in the case of
a registered dealer there are four variations in the matter
of assessment of his turnover: (1) He submits a
450
return by the date prescribed and pays the tax due in terms
of the said return ; the Commissioner accepts the
correctness of the return and appropriates the amount paid
towards the tax due for the period covered by the return.
(2) The Commissioner is not satisfied with the correctness
of the return ; he issues - notice to him under s. 11(2),
and makes an enquiry as provided under the Act, but does not
finalize the assessment. (3) The registered dealer does not
submit a return ; the Commissioner issues a notice under s.
10(3) and s. 11(4) of the Act. And (4) the registered
dealer does not submit any return for any period and the
Commissioner issues notice to him beyond three years. If
the return was accepted and the amount paid was appropriated
towards the tax due for the relevant period, it means that
there has been a final assessment in regard to the said
period. If any turnover escaped assessment, clearly it can
be reopened only within the period prescribed in s. 11--A.
In the case where a return has been made, but the Commis-
sioner has not accepted it, and has issued a notice for en-
quiry, the assessment proceedings will certainly be pending
till the final assessment is made. Even in a case where no
return has been made, but the Commissioner initiated
proceedings by issuing a relevant notice either under s.
10(3) or under s., 11(4), the proceedings will be pending
thereafter before the Commissioner till the final assessment
is made. But where no return has been made and the
Commissioner has not issued any notice under the Act, how
can it be held that some proceedings are pending before the
Commissioner when none existed as a matter of fact? We are
concerned in this case with the last contingency.
It is manifest that in the case of a registered dealer the
proceedings before the Commissioner starts factually when a
return is made or when a notice is issued to him either
under s. 10(3) or under s. 11(2) of the Act. The acceptance
of the contention that the statutory obligation to file a
return initiates the proceedings is to invoke a fiction not
sanctioned by the Act. The obligation can be enforced by
taking a suitable action under the Act. Taking of such an
action may have the effect of initiating proceedings against
the defaulter. The de-
451
fault may be the occasion for initiating the proceedings,
but the default itself proprio vigore cannot initiate pro-
ceedings. Proceedings in respect of the assessment of the
turnover for the relevant period cannot, therefore, be said
to be pending before the Commissioner. Learned counsel for
the respondent contends that the certificate of registration
is itself a notice to the registered dealer to furnish his
returns within the prescribed time. Reliance is placed upon
Form 11 wherein under the appropriate column the particulars
in regard to a dealer’s return and the date which he should
submit it are given. The main purpose of the registration
certificate is to localize dealers with taxable turnovers
and to facilitate the collection of taxes. The registration
certificate enables the dealer to carry on the business.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 18
Neither s. 8 which enjoins such registration on every dealer
with taxable turnover nor rule 8 which prescribes the
particulars to be incorporated in a certificate suggests
that the certificate itself is a statutory notice to a
dealer. The objects of the certificate and the statutory
notices under the Act are different and the former cannot be
equated with the latter.
Rule 33 provides that the assessing authority shall maintain
a register in Form XIII in which he shall enter the details
of each case initiated under rr. 31 and 32. Rule 31 says
that on receipt of a return or returns required under r. 19,
20 or 22 from any dealer, the assessing authority shall
serve on him a notice in Form XI. Rule 32 prescribes, inter
alia, the manner of assessment under sub-section (3) of s.
10, cl. (a) of sub-section (4) of s. 11, sub-section (5) of
s. 11. Form XII gives the serial number, taxable turnover
as...determined for the relevant years and the date of issue
of notice in Form XI or Form XII. A perusal of the said
rules and the forms discloses that the proceedings in the
case of a registered dealer start only on the receipt of a
return or returns required to be furnished under the rules.
Under r. 33 a register is maintained giving the details of
each case "instituted" under rr. 31 and 32. Rule 34 enacts
that a case instituted would be pending till an order of
assessment was made. No doubt it would be pending till a
final order of assessment was made by the highest tribunal
or court under the Act.
452
At this stage some of the decisions cited at the Bar may
conveniently be noticed. A Full Bench of the Bombay High
Court in Bisesar House v. State of Bombay(1) held that a
notice under sub-section (2) of s. 11 of the C.P. & Berar
Sales Tax Act, 1947, could not be issued more than three
years after the expiry of the period for which it was
proposed to make the assessment ; but an assessment under
sub-section (1) of s. 11 could be made more than three years
after the expiry of such period. There, a dealer made his
return and paid the tax, which according to him was due for
three chargeable accounting years. The Commissioner of
Sales-tax served notices on him under s. 11(2) in respect of
the first two years more than three years after the end of
the chargeable accounting years. The Court drew a
distinction between sub-sections (1) and (2) of s. 11 and
came to the conclusion that in the former case it was only a
:formal appropriation of the amounts paid towards the tax
due and therefore it could be done even after three years,
but in the latter case the issue of notice under s. 11(2)
was in a substantial sense an initiation of proceedings by
the Commissioner and his failure to tax these turnovers
would constitute "escaped assessment" within the meaning of
s. 11-A of the Act and therefore it could be reopened only
within 3 years prescribed thereunder. The learned judges,
if we may say so with respect did not consider the question,
in what circumstances assessment proceedings could be held
to be pending? As we have held that the submission of a
statutory return would initiate the proceedings and that the
proceedings would be pending till a final order of
assessment was made on the said return, no question of
limitation would arise. A Division Bench of the same High
Court, in Ramakrishna Ramnath v. Sales Tax Officer,
Nagpur(2), made a distinction between proceedings under s.
11(4)(a) and those under s. 11 (2) of the Act in that
proceedings under s. 11(2) are for the purpose of assessment
whereas those under s. 11(4)(a) are taken in terrorem and
the dealer is penalised by a best judgment assessment in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
default of compliance. On that reasoning they held that the
period of
(1) (1958) 9 S.T.C. 654.
(2) (1960) 11 S.T.C. 811.
453
limitation prescribed under s’ 11-A might apply to a pro-
ceeding under s. 11(2), but no such period of limitation was
laid down in the Act in respect of a proceeding under s.
10(3) or s. 11(4)(a) of the Act. We find it rather
difficult to appreciate the reasoning on which the learned
Judges distinguished the Full Bench decision. But the
question of pendency of proceedings was not raised before
the Division Bench and was not considered by it. For the
foregoing reasons we hold that a statutory obligation to
make a return within a prescribed time does not proprio
vigore initiate the assessment proceedings before the
Commissioner; but the proceedings would commence after the
return was submitted and would continue till a final order
of assessment was made in regard to the said return.
Now let us apply the said legal position to the facts of
Civil Appeal No. 101 of 1961. The appellant has to submit
quarterly returns and assessments are made on the basis of
’the said returns ; that is to say, he has to be assessed
for his turnover separately in respect of each quarter.
Therefore, the question of escape of assessment has to be
considered on the ground that each quarter is a separate
period for the assessment. For the year 1949-50 i.e., for
the period from October 22, 1949 to November 9, 1950, he had
to submit 4 returns for the four quarters. But he had
submitted only one return on October 5, 1950 for one
quarter. No assessment was made in respect of any of the
four quarters. So the assessment proceedings must be held
to be pending before the Commissioner only in respect of the
quarter for which the appellant had made the return. In
respect of the other quarters no proceedings could be said
to be pending before the Commissioner. The Tribunal has no
jurisdiction to issue a notice under s. 11-A with respect to
the quarters other than that covered by the return made by
the appellant.
So far as Civil Appeal No. 102 of 1961 is concerned, the
appellant had not submitted any returns for the year 1950-51
i.e., for the period from November 10, 1950 to October 31,
1951. The Assistant Commissioner of Sales-tax issued a
notice to him on October 15, 1954 in Form XII purporting to
be under s. 11 (4) of the Act. The said
454
notice was within 3 years from October 16, 1951 which fell
within the 4th quarter of the concerned year. Under s. 11-A
of the Act the period of 3 years has to be calculated from
the expiry of the period in regard whereto any turnover has
escaped assessment. As the unit of assessment is a quarter,
the period in s. 11-A can only mean a quarter and it cannot
be further split up into months, weeks and days. The said
period is the fourth quarter and it expired on October 31,
1951. If so, it follows that the Commissioner has
jurisdiction to assess the turnover in respect of the entire
fourth quarter as the notice was issued within three years
from the expiry of the said quarter.
But in this case the Commissioner assessed, the appellant in
respect of the turnover of the entire year without showing
separately the assessment of tax payable in respect of each
quarter. We, cannot, therefore, confine the relief to be
given to the appellant in these appeals to the period barred
under s. 11-A of the Act. We ’would, therefore set aside
the assessments in, both the appeals giving liberty to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
respondent to make the assessment separately for the periods
not barred under s. 11-A of the Act either because a return
was filed, as in the first case or because the last quarter
was within the period of three years, as in the second case.
In the result, the appeals are allowed with costs
throughout.
RAGHUBAR DAYAL, j.--I am of opinion that the appeals should
be dismissed as the turnover for the years 1949-50 and 1950-
51 could not be said to be turnover which escaped
assessment, within the meaning of that expression in s. 11-A
of the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 (XXI of
1947), hereinafter called the Act and therefore the notices
issued by the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax in 1954
under s. 11 (2) cannot be said to be notices issued under s.
11-A beyond the period within which they could have been
issued.
It is not disputed that a turnover cannot be said to have
escaped assessment if the proceedings for the assessment of
the sales tax on that -turnover be pending. The question
then is whether proceedings for assessment of-the turnover
for these two years were pending when the im-
453
pugned notices were issued. To determine this question we
have to see when such proceedings for the assessment ,of the
sales tax on the turnover of a dealer in a certain period
commences.
All dealers whose turnover during a year exceeds the limits
laid down in sub-section (5) of s. 4 of the Act are liable
to pay....sales tax in accordance with the provisions of the
Act. .....All such dealers have to get themselves registered
and..obtain a registration certificate : vide s. 8. The
registered dealer is required by s. 10(1) to furnish the
prescribed returns by prescribed dates to the prescribed
authority. Rule 19 of the Rules provides for the furnishing
to the Sales Tax Officer quarterly returns in Form IV within
one calendar month from the expiry of the quarter to which
the return relates. In certain cases, such a return is to
be submitted within two calendar months. The amount of tax
calculated on the turnover shown in the return is to be
deposited in the treasury and the treasury receipt in Form V
is to accompany the return. If the registered dealer
furnishes the necessary return, the Sales Tax Officer can
assess on the amount of turnover shown in the returns in
case he considers them to be correct and complete : vide s.
11(1). If he be not so satisfied he has to serve a notice
under sub-section (2) of s. 11 on the registered dealer to
take the various steps he requires for satisfying him about
the correct amount of the turnover and, on his computing
this amount, he has to assess the tax in accordance with
sub-section (3) of s. 11 of the Act.
The Sales Tax Officer can also require an unregistered
dealer to furnish returns by a certain (late, in view of the
provisions of sub-section (1) of s. 10 and, if the dealer
submits such returns he can make the assessment on the basis
of the returns if satisfied with their correctness, or he
may serve another notice under s. 11 (2) on the dealer to
take steps to satisfy him about the correct amount of the
turnover and, if the dealer responds to the second notice,
he assesses him, after necessary inquiry, to tax under s. 11
(3).
So far, the procedure for assessment of tax is the same,
both for the registered dealer and the ordinary dealer, in
case both of them furnish the returns of the turn-
456
over as required by the provisions of sub-section (1) of s.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
10 and also comply, if required, with the provisions of
sub-section (2) of s. 11.
Different procedures, however, have to be followed if ’the
two types of dealers do not file returns or, after filing
returns, do not respond to the notice issued under sub-
section (2) of s. 11. The Act does not provide for the
Sales Tax Officer’s taking steps for the assessment of the
tax on the- ground of the unregistered dealer’s not
complying with either notice, i.e., when the unregistered
dealer does not submit a return, or, after submitting a re-
turn which is not accepted, does not respond to the notice
issued under sub-section (2), of s. 11.
The Sales Tax Officer can however, proceed against such a
dealer under sub-section (5) of s. 11 and will probably do
so as the conduct of the unregistered dealer would tend to
confirm the information which led him to issue notice under
s. 10(1) ; but his action will be not on the ground that the
dealer had made default in furnishing the return or had
failed to comply with the notice issued under sub-section
(2) of s. 11 but will be on the ground that according to his
information the dealer had been liable to pay tax under the
Act in respect of that period and had, nevertheless,
wilfully failed to apply for registration. Under the
provisions of sub-section (5) of s. 11 he, after giving the
dealer reasonable opportunity of being heard, can proceed to
assess the tax to the best of his judgment within three
calendar years from the expiry of the period in respect of
the turnover of which he was liable to be assessed to tax.
The dealer, in such a case, has not only to pay the tax
assessed, but has to pay the penalty which is not to exceed
one and a half times the amount of the tax assessed. If
such a dealer had been one to whom a notice under sub-
section (1) of s. 10 had been issued and had failed, without
any sufficient cause, to comply with the requirements of
that notice, he could also be’ ordered to pay, by way of
penalty, a sum not exceeding one-fourth the amount of the
tax which be assessed on him under s. 11, in view of the
provisions of sub-section (3) of s. 10.
It will be seen that though the Sales Tax Officer has to
proceed to make the assessment within three calendar
457
years of the period whose turnover was liable to tax, there
is no time limit within which he must -finish the assessment
proceeding. They are simply to be started within the
prescribed period of time, but can be finished at any later
period.
It may also be noticed here that the ’period of three years’
in sub-section (5) of s. 11 was substituted by the Amending
Act XX of 1953 in place of the expression ’from the
commencement of this Act and thereafter within twelve
months’ and that s. 11-A which deals with the assessment of
the turnover escaping assessment was also introduced by the
same Act and that these amendments were given retrospective
effect from the 1st of June 1947, the date when the Act
originally came into force. Section 11-A empowers the Sales
Tax Officer to proceed to assess or reassess certain
turnover, including turnover which escaped assessment,
within three years from the expiry of that period.
The procedure to be followed against the registered dealer,
in case he does not furnish the return in respect of any
period by the prescribed date-which he is required to do by
sub-section (1) of s. 10-or, having furnished such returns,
failed to comply with the notice issued under sub-section
(2) of s. 11, is different. Sub-section (4) of s. 11
empowers the Sales Tax Officer, in such circumstances, to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
assess the registered dealer to the best of his judgment, in
the prescribed manner. He has, however, to give a further
notice to the registered dealer in case the registered
dealer has not furnished the return at all. The registered
dealer can also be made to pay penalty, if Ms failure to
furnish the return is without any sufficient cause, in
accordance with the provisions of sub-section (3) of s. 10.
There is no time limit fixed for the Sales Tax Officer to
take action against the registered dealer under sub-sections
(2) and (4) of s. 11.
The question then is, when do the proceedings for the
assessment of sales tax, commence against the registered
dealer? I am of the view that they commence from the
prescribed date for his submitting the return which he is
required to submit by sub-section (1) of s. 10. No notice
is necessary to be issued to him for the submitting of the
return for the purpose of assessment. The statute,
30-2SC India/64
458
by the provisions in sub-section (1) of s. 10, gives him the
required notice to the effect that he is to submit the
necessary returns by the dates prescribed by the rules. The
registration certificate issued to him mentions the period
of the dealer’s year, the prescribed return period and the
dates by which the dealer had to furnish the returns. The
registered dealer is, in this way, in no worse position than
an ordinary dealer who receives a notice from the Sales Tax
Officer for submitting the returns by a certain date. The
object of the notice to submit a return is nothing but the
obtaining of the material for the Sales Tax Officer to
determine the amount of the turnover and, if assessable to
tax, to assess the tax due on that turnover. The notice is
a step towards the proceedings for the assessment of the
sales tax. In the case of the unregistered dealer, the
Sales Tax Officer commences the proceedings for assessment
by the issue of a notice under sub-section (1) of s. 10,
and, in the case of a registered dealer, the statute has
already fixed the date for the furnishing of the return and
therefore has set in motion the process for the assessment
of the sales tax by the Sales Tax Officer. I do not see any
good reason why the statutory notice to the registered
dealer be not considered to be at par with the notice issued
to the ordinary dealer by the Sales Tax Officer and why it
should not be taken to initiate the assessment proceedings
just as the issue of a notice by the Sales Tax Officer would
have initiated the proceedings against the ordinary dealer.
The failure of the registered dealer to furnish the return
enables the Sales Tax Officer to assess the tax to the best
of his judgment, of course, after giving an opportunity to
the registered dealer of being heard. It would be
incongruous if the Sales Tax Officer be held not to have
initiated the assessment proceedings against the registered
dealer and yet, on the failure of such a dealer to furnish
the returns, to proceed in the very first instance to assess
tax on the dealer to the best of his judgment. Such a power
of taxing to the best of his judgment is an indication of
the fact that the dealer had defaulted in respect of some
proceedings connected with the assessment of tax and thus
has made himself liable to tax on the best judgment basis
instead of a tax on the computed amount of turnover ac-
459
cording to the records. His default lies in his not submit-
ting, the return of turnover and not depositing the tax due
on the turnover shown in the return. The payment of tax as
a result of the statutory notice under s. 10(1) and r. 19
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 18
well points to the conclusion that the statutory notice and
rule initiate the assessment proceedings against the
registered dealer at least from the date of the close of the
quarter for which the turnover is to be furnished and tax is
to be paid.
The mere fact that the Sales Tax Officer cannot proceed
against an unregistered dealer who, though liable to pay a
tax, did not get himself registered, after the expiry of
three years from the period the -turnover in which was
liable to tax, cannot lead to the conclusion that the Sales
Tax Officer cannot take necessary steps to assess a
registered dealer under sub-section (2) and (4) of s. 11
after the expiry of three years from the period whose
turnover he proceeds to assess, for the simple reason that
s. 11 or any other provision of the Act does not lay down
any such restriction on the Sales Tax Officer’s powers under
these sub-sections.
Such a power in the Sales Tax Officer does not contravene
the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution. The
registered dealer and the unregistered dealer belong to
different classes. The former is one whose liability to tax
is admitted. The other has admitted no such liability. The
Sales Tax Officer can find out about the liability of the
unregistered dealer to tax only by issuing a notice to him
under sub-section (1) of s. 10 when he thinks that such a
dealer might be liable to tax. It is only when the
information in his possession is sufficiently strong and
trustworthy as to satisfy him that a certain unregistered
dealer is liable to by sales tax and has wilfully failed to
apply for registration that he can take action under sub-
section (5) of s. 11. The circumstances in which the Sales
Tax Officer can take action against the unregistered dealer
are different from the circumstances in which lie takes
action against the registered dealer. I am therefore of
opinion that the Sales Tax Officer does not contravene Art.
14 of the Constitution as contended for the appellant, if he
takes action against a registered dealer under sub-section
(2) or (4) of s. 11 even after the expiry of
460
three years from the period whose’ turnover is to be
assessed.
It is to be noticed that the Act, as originally-enacted, did
not have s. 11-A. -That was introduced in 1953 and made
retrospective from June 1, 1947. Amendment was made in 1953
in s. 11 (5) and it made the period of limitation for
proceeding to assess tax three years. No amendment
providing limitation was however made in s. 11(2) and (4) in
1953. This must be deliberate and indicates the intention
of the Legislature not to limit the period during which
action can be taken under s. 11(2) and (4).
The Register of Cases in Form XIII of the Rules & Forms is
for cases instituted under ss.10(3), 11, 11-A and 22-C of
the Act. Its columns do not show when the assessment of tax
proceedings commence. Still its column 14 is meant for
’Amount of penalty imposed, if any, with relevant section
under which it is imposed and reference to defaulters’
list’. This shows that the Sales Tax Officer maintains a
list of registered dealers who had defaulted in not
complying with the notices under s. 10(1) or 11(2) or under
any other provision which makes the registered dealer liable
to penalty. The maintenance of the defaulters’ list
indicates that the Sales Tax Officer initiates proceedings
for tax assessment prior to his issuing notices under s.
10(3) and that this must be after the expiry of the date for
furnishing returns referred to in s. 10(1).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 18
In view of the opinion I have expressed above, it is not
necessary to decide what the precise scope of the expression
’turnover escaping assessment’ in s. 11-A is.
It follows that the impugned notices were properly issued by
the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax to the appellant and
that these appeals fail. I would accordingly dismiss these
appeals with costs.
ORDER BY COURT
In accordance with the opinion of the majority, the appeals
are allowed with costs throughout, one hearing fee.
461